An open house March 31 unveiled the homes of “The Settlement,” built in Bradley on a cul-de-sac off 128th Avenue west of 6th Street with nearly $2.5 million in grants.
Tribal housing director Melissa Brown said the homes will first be offered to tribal elders—members older than age 50—who now live throughout west Michigan but may lack the means to live where the tribe has called home for more than a century.
The 400-member tribe has approximately 80 elders.
The tribe, also known as the Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band, settled in Bradley in 1838 near Gun Lake. According to the tribe, the tribal settlement was then called the Griswold Mission, overseen by an Episcopal church. The tribe was formally recognized by the federal government Aug. 23, 1999.
“This is exciting,” Brown said of the project’s completion. “We worked hard to get here.”
The Settlement is the tribe’s first housing project. The two- and three-bedroom homes on 33 acres include some “green” features, such as geothermal heating systems, efficient windows and on-demand water heaters.
To accommodate some needs of the elderly, the homes contain no stairs and have wheelchair-friendly door frame widths.
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